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bananas

(27,509 posts)
Fri May 2, 2014, 08:22 PM May 2014

Candy maker MARS to build a wind farm massive enough to fully power its 37 US factories

Source: Tree Hugger

The giant candy and pet food maker MARS Inc has taken a big step in the right direction by announcing that it will soon begin construction of a massive wind farm in Texas that will produce enough clean energyto power all of MARS' operations in the United States (they have 37 factories and 70 offices, so it's a pretty big deal). This is one of many steps that the company has been taking as part of its 'sustainable in a generation' plan:

<snip>

A gigantic 200-megawatt wind project

The wind farm will be erected near Lamesa, Texas, with 118 GE wind turbines (1.7MW each) producing annually about 800,000 megawatt-hours, equivalent to what it takes to power 61,000 U.S. households. This will be enough for MARS' 37 US factories, and represent about 24% of their global factory and office carbon footprint. Hopefully they keep rapidly improving that number and reach 100% before their target date.

Regardless of whether you buy MARS' products or not, it's better for the climate to have them manufactured with clean energy than with dirty one, so this is clearly a 'win'. It should also inspire other companies to do the same, so this move also has value as a potential catalyst.

Construction of the Texas wind farm will begin at the end of 2014, with about 10 turbines going up each week. It should be finished and fully operational by mid-2015. And to be clear, the wind farm will produce an amount of electricity equivalent to what they use across the US, it won't be directly connected to all those offices.

<snip>

Read more: http://www.treehugger.com/green-investments/candy-maker-mars-build-wind-farm-massive-enough-fully-power-its-37-us-factories.html

23 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Candy maker MARS to build a wind farm massive enough to fully power its 37 US factories (Original Post) bananas May 2014 OP
This proves there is intelligent life on Mars. nt bananas May 2014 #1
Good one! deurbano May 2014 #2
DUzy !!! alittlelark May 2014 #7
In response several Angry Birds called for a massive strike against windshields everywhere 951-Riverside May 2014 #3
Dammit. I was going to make this joke. Chakab May 2014 #6
angry birds or father founding May 2014 #17
Sweet! jpak May 2014 #4
great news! BlancheSplanchnik May 2014 #5
Can someone explain why MARS no longer makes a MARS BAR? brooklynite May 2014 #8
Maybe you can get those in the UK. I thought I saw them last time I was in London. iandhr May 2014 #11
More than you ever need to really know: bigworld May 2014 #14
Ahhh wikipedia... penultimate May 2014 #16
Cool? Egnever May 2014 #9
25,000 acres pothos May 2014 #18
Land owners that have wind generators on their property are paid handsomely to lease their land progressoid May 2014 #22
Joe Barton is introducing legislation to stop it, because the windmills will stop the earth's jtuck004 May 2014 #10
Good for them IronLionZion May 2014 #12
I wonder what the cost is? grahamhgreen May 2014 #13
Excellent! lonestarnot May 2014 #15
KICK! Cha May 2014 #19
I hope wind power is just a temporary solution aint_no_life_nowhere May 2014 #20
Good. But, I wish they would stop using chocolate that exploits African children mucifer May 2014 #21
I would prefer roof top solar panels gejohnston May 2014 #23

brooklynite

(94,501 posts)
8. Can someone explain why MARS no longer makes a MARS BAR?
Fri May 2, 2014, 10:17 PM
May 2014

They renames it SNICKERS ALMOND, but still kept the company name.

penultimate

(1,110 posts)
16. Ahhh wikipedia...
Sat May 3, 2014, 11:21 AM
May 2014

Where I go from reading an article on Mars bars, to nougats, to praline, to Châteaus and ultimately end up reading about secret flying wings of the Luftwaffe....

 

Egnever

(21,506 posts)
9. Cool?
Fri May 2, 2014, 11:22 PM
May 2014

I have a few questions about this.

How big an area of land will that take? Who owns that land? Who will the power actually go to and what will they be charged for it.

I don't think utilities should be privately controlled. I do like the idea of using wind for power as opposed to fossil fuels. I am just not sure that having mars candy supplying my power is the way I want to go.

 

jtuck004

(15,882 posts)
10. Joe Barton is introducing legislation to stop it, because the windmills will stop the earth's
Fri May 2, 2014, 11:25 PM
May 2014

rotation and we will all surely die.

aint_no_life_nowhere

(21,925 posts)
20. I hope wind power is just a temporary solution
Sat May 3, 2014, 06:51 PM
May 2014

Last edited Sat May 3, 2014, 07:23 PM - Edit history (1)

I much prefer the idea of a wind farm to use of fossil fuels. I prefer the sight of wind farms to that of gigantic oil refineries or landscapes covered with oil derricks, or the sight of oil slicks in rivers,lakes and shorelines every time there's an oil spill. But frankly having seen entire desert panoramas blighted by thousands of these monstrosities in California, I hope we eventually find some other solution than covering acres and acres of the natural environment with them. I remember hearing on a science show on public radio back in the early 1970s some NASA scientists who said even back then that we had the technology to send gigantic solar panels into outer space to beam back the collected energy of the sun in the form of diffuse microwaves and it was only funding and the public will that was holding back the development of that more environmentally friendly approach..

mucifer

(23,527 posts)
21. Good. But, I wish they would stop using chocolate that exploits African children
Sat May 3, 2014, 07:47 PM
May 2014
Approximately 70 per cent of the cocoa beans used to make the worlds chocolate comes from West Africa. It is estimated that the Ivory Coast has 300,000 children working in dangerous conditions with more half of these children under the age of 14. The work includes spraying pesticides, using machetes and carrying heavy loads. The children have no access to education or healthcare and physical abuse is common.

While being aware of this issue for more than ten years the international chocolate industry has only recently made some significant progress. Cadbury now has Fairtrade certification on its Dairy Milk branding, while Mars and Nestle have some products certified under the UTZ and Rainforest Alliance schemes (both called “Fairtrade light” by critics, as they offer producers no minimum or guaranteed price for their crop). These changes are positive but greater corporate responsibility is required to end child exploitation.

http://www.ethical.org.au/get-informed/issues/child-exploitation-and-chocolate/
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